He got more and more desperate, and eventually started using his sand powers to try to stop them from getting away, scaring them even more. None of the kids would play with him at first because he was the host of the Ichibi and they were scared. The Jinchuuriki tend to suffer from this from their earliest childhoods.there's also a theme about those unable to do this becoming a Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: In Naruto, there is a sort of theme about overcoming this sort of situation with The Power of Friendship.Angel Densetsu: Kitano-kun starts off like this because of his fearsome appearance, but then someone finds out his true nature, and things sort of snowball from there.In Code Geass, the Tyke Bomb ( Rolo) is all too happy to be rescued from that state by his supposed target, whom he becomes an underling of.Yuko alone befriended her with what can only be described as social brute force. It is true that she's surrounded by some serious jackasses, but a lot of her later interactions reveal that she has absolutely No Social Skills and is a bit of a Control Freak with a slight narcissistic streak. In Chainsaw Man, Part 2's Loser Protagonist Asa is a misanthropic grouch and her lack of friends is as much their fault as it is hers.Another ( Starrk) becomes an underling of the latter guy because anyone else simply died in his mere presence, so powerful he is. Another ( AIZEN) becomes a Magnificent Bastard Young Conqueror (by Shinigami standards) because of this. One of them (Kon) is simply The Chew Toy, and it's Played for Laughs. Several characters in Bleach have rather bad cases of this. ![]() ![]() Even then, despite achieving shallow popularity, the lack of equals to share meaningful interactions with, even antagonistic ones, might doom them to Broken Ace status. May overlap with Intelligence Equals Isolation, at least until the character figures out how to use their intelligence for social manipulation. Their storylines will usually include a lucky escape from the cycle into a stable circle of friends or more. The principle is the same: they are alone, and they are stuck there for the time being, whether they accept it or not. They might also engulf themselves in online social lives, or, failing that, Video Games such as The Sims. They might end up so freaking lonely they make themselves imaginary friends out of puppets, and act out their fantasies of happiness through them. Geekiness, being handicapped, racial or cultural isolation, being non-heteronormal. The reasons they were alone in the first place may vary. Those who have given up and perhaps even given in to the Dark Side, might have to be beaten into it, but they'll come to enjoy friendship as soon as they taste it, usually. Those who haven't entirely given up will be very glad for any opportunity to make new friends, and will probably go to extreme lengths of loyalty for those who accepted them. So the cycle feeds on itself, and the person may feel like they are trapped in that situation for the rest of their lives. Either way, this will be noticed by those who interact with them, who will instinctively deem it too much trouble to help them out and will stay the hell away from them. Being alone makes it hard for them to hone their social skills, it also makes them either desperate for friendship, love, and sex, or completely jaded and bitter about the entire matter. ![]() This person is trapped in a vicious cycle of loneliness and asociality.
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